Hoax letter writers

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This article covers various hoax letter writers.

Henry Root[]

Henry Root is the creation of writer William Donaldson who wrote to numerous public figures with unusual or outlandish questions and requests. The letters were published as The Henry Root Letters and The Further Letters of Henry Root and a compilation volume, The Complete Henry Root Letters.

The Henry Root character inspired the ITV mini-series, Root Into Europe, starring George Cole.

Others[]

Other prank mail and reviewers include:

  • John Hargrave of Zug.com, who sent a letter to all US senators, posing as a child and asking them for their favourite joke.[1]
  • Bill Geerhart, author of the book Little Billy's Letters (Morrow, 2010)
  • Ed Broth - also possibly the creation of comedian Jerry Seinfeld.
  • Robin Cooper who wrote The Timewaster Letters - the creation of Robert Popper.
  • Ted L. Nancy - the creation of comedian Barry Marder.
  • W. Morgan Petty - the nom de plume of Brian Bethell.
  • H. Rochester Sneath - the fictional headmaster of the fictional British public school Selhurst, created by Humphry Berkeley.
  • the fictitious Lazlo Toth - the creation of actor/writer Don Novello, who played Father Guido Sarducci on Saturday Night Live.
  • Edna Welthorpe was a prudish middle-aged housewife who was strongly opposed to her creator Joe Orton's plays.
  • James Spence, author of Silly Beggar: The World's Stupidest Begging Letters, wrote absurd comedy emails requesting free items from companies.
  • Bob Servant who swapped emails with Internet Spammers in the book Delete This At Your Peril - the creation of Neil Forsyth.
  • David Thorne, who came to public attention for tongue-in-cheek letters and emails, such as an attempt to "pay" a bill with a drawing of a seven-legged spider (2008) and repeatedly RSVPing for a party to which he had not been invited.
  • Liz Reed - another character created by William Donaldson, Reed's TV production pitches - for shows such as 'Disabled Gladiators' and 'Anglotrash' - in the guise of Heart Felt Productions were collected in the 1998 book, The Heart Felt Letters.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "The Senator Prank - ZUG.com, 2004". Archived from the original on 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2010-03-12.

External links[]

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